Before the Curtain: Arts on Campus Week 7
This week, explore events at the Hop and the Hood and attend both Glee Club’s and Coast Jazz orchestra’s culminating concerts for the term.
This week, explore events at the Hop and the Hood and attend both Glee Club’s and Coast Jazz orchestra’s culminating concerts for the term.
The Collective began its U.S. tour at the Hopkins Center for the Arts and was guest directed by South African cellist Abel Selaocoe.
The symposium brought together academics to discuss animal depictions in eighteenth and nineteenth century art.
Fueled by a sense of deep nostalgia, the new album explores being sick of home and being homesick through a strong sense of people and place.
Townsend read and commented on her recent novel, “Mother Country,” in Sanborn Library.
Cook introduces her upcoming novel, “Tell Them To Be Quiet and Wait,” the story of Dartmouth’s first female professor.
“Blonde” illuminates the biopic genre’s tendency to glamorize and sexualize suffering.
Director Jennifer Robinson’s sophomore feature, “Do Revenge,” is a successful Gen-Z spin on Hitchcock’s “Strangers on a Train.”
Rina Sawayama’s “Hold the Girl” is a cathartic journey toward self acceptance and liberation
Criticisms surrounding “Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story” offer new insights into the ever-growing popularity of true crime serial killer dramas.
‘Maḏayin: Eight Decades of Aboriginal Australian Bark Painting from Yirrkala’ the first major exhibition of Aboriginal Australian art in the United States, is currently on view at the Hood until Dec.4.
McCurdy’s memoir reveals the traumas she endured as a child actor at Nickelodeon, reviving discourses surrounding child abuse in the acting industry.
Director Olivia Wilde’s “Don’t Worry Darling” disappoints fans with a predictable story and unresolved plot.
While Styles’s residency at Madison Square Garden nears its end, he dazzled on Sept. 15 with a high energy performance.
The documentary examines the political situation in Russia, showing the complexities of information warfare and censorship.
The Hopkins Center for the Arts will be offering a wide array of musical, theatrical and dance performances this fall.
From open rehearsals to audition dates to testimonials from current members, here’s everything you need to know about a cappella at Dartmouth.
A chronological look at where to find public artworks across campus and the significance of these pieces.
The tongue-in-cheek adaptation of Jane Austen’s novel is too self-aware for its own good.
Featuring students with diverse musical backgrounds, the band performs in a style new to Dartmouth’s live music scene.